| Franklin Thomas Baker, George Rice Carpenter, Katherine Bowditch Owens, Mary Elizabeth Brooks, Ida Elizabeth Robbins, Jennie Freeborn Owens, Mary Frederika Kirchwey - Readers - 1906 - 170 pages
...b ook f ine d amp pi ace c ook m ine c amp r ace If all the world were apple pie, And all the seas were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? 45 THE OLD WOMAN woman gone f There was an old woman Lived under a hill; And if she's not gone, She... | |
| Franklin Thomas Baker - Readers - 1906 - 162 pages
...b ook f ine d amp pi ace c ook m ine c amp r ace If all the world were apple pie, And all the seas were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink ? 45 THE OLD WOMAN woman gone There was an old woman Lived under a hill ; And if she's not gone, She... | |
| Douglas Macleane - Logic - 1906 - 614 pages
...subjunctive mood in the past tense, suggesting the improbability of the condition being realized. ' If all the sea were ink, and all the trees were bread and cheese, what should we do for drink?' But even so, the distinction is only on the surface. ' If any A were B it would be C'... | |
| Georgia Alexander - Spellers - 1907 - 220 pages
...Tell something interesting that happened, using from memory not fewer than five of the words above. If all the world were apple-pie, And all the sea were...were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink ? — Mother Goose. 20 They made a boat out of a newspaper, and put the Tin Soldier in the middle of... | |
| Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin - Children's poetry - 1907 - 276 pages
...strawberries grew in the sea? I answered him as I thought good, As many as red herrings grew in the wood. r If all the world were apple-pie, And all the sea were...the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have for drink? (First child). (Second child.) 1. I am a gold lock. 2. I am a gold key. 1. I am a silver... | |
| Marion Florence Lansing - English language - 1907 - 200 pages
...and " ands " Were pots and pans, There would be no use for tinkers. If all the world were apple pie, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have for drink ? [81] A LITTLE red hen once found a grain of wheat. " Who will plant this wheat ? " she... | |
| 1911 - 152 pages
...into rolls make it, And send us some hot in the morn. —Mother Goose. If All the World Were Apple-pie If all the world were apple-pie, And all the sea were...were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? —Mother Goose. Once I Saw a Little Bird Once I saw a little bird Come hop, hop, hop; $o I cried,... | |
| Harriette Taylor Treadwell, Margaret Free - Readers - 1911 - 152 pages
...hot in the morn. — Mother Goose. If All the World Were Apple Pie If all the world were apple pie, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? — Mother Goose. Once I Saw a Little Bird Once I saw a little bird Come hop, hop, hop; So I cried,... | |
| Education - 1911 - 590 pages
...dear, Old Santa Claus will soon be here. Tommy Hooks (with expression) If all the world were apple pie And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What would we have for drink ? Children (in chorus) That's enough to make us all Sit right up and think.... | |
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